After crushing New Zealand in its opening match, defending champion Australia is considered a heavy favourite to reach the knock-out phase in South Africa.
Described by peers as 'a fabulous wicketkeeper, a really good captain, and a very good opening bat' World Cup winning wicketkeeper Margaret Jennings has been a pioneer
Terri Nicole said: “I like booking to go places. Means it doesn’t get too crowded.” The sentiment was echoed by Karl Lloyd who said that it means there is not huge crowds of people. Kirsten Pike says that booking for the recycling centre is one she wants to keep. Rachael Slee likes the recycling centre time slots, telephone triage system at the doctors surgeries and booking systems for tables in pubs – when they reopen. Working from home is also a hit with our readers. With many preferring the time at home – and not missing the commutes. Lauren Davies said: “Working from home if you can. There doesn t need to be 100s of people packed into offices if not necessary.”
State s biggest business bust-ups of 2020 It was a year that tested businesses to the limit and as expected 2020 had its fair share of heavy-hitting Queensland business bust ups and defections.
Business by Emmaline Stigwood
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Subscriber only In a year that tested businesses like no other, 2020 saw plenty of executives switching allegiances, long-term business buddies breaking up and some major legal disputes hit the headlines.
SURF S OUT One of the biggest lawsuits of the year came when Billabong founder Gordon Merchant sued top tier tax firm EY for $58m. Mr Merchant, the Gold Coast surf lover who founded Billabong in 1973, filed a Supreme Court action outlining how following tax advice for a company sale in 2015 had allegedly ended with him being pursued by the tax office, penalised about $13m and banned from running his self managed super fund.